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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (
pneumoconiosis
)
1,578
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Based on the new international definition of
pneumoconiosis
the various types of this lesion and their roentgenological appearance are described. The lesions may arise from fibrosis-inducing dusts (silica, asbestos) and also from the deposition of dust particles especially those of high atomic weight.
Pneumoconiosis
in coal miners, the most common dust-induced
lung disease
in Germany, is reviewed in detail and the X-ray demonstration of dust in the lungs is discussed.
...
PMID:[Roentgenologically demonstrable changes in pneumoconiosis (author's transl)]. 46 58
The prevalence at death of carcinoma of the lung in miners and ex-miners has been compared in those with and without
pneumoconiosis
at necropsy. The prevalence of 11.4% in the group as a whole is no greater than that in the male population in North-west England. Carcinoma of the lung was present in 62 (13.1%) of those without
pneumoconiosis
and in 52 (9.8%) of those with
pneumoconiosis
. The mean age at death of those with
pneumoconiosis
was 71.3 years so that they cannot be said to have died before the age at which they would have developed carcinoma. Those with progressive massive fibrosis whose mean age at death was 72 years had the lowest prevalence of carcinoma of the lung at all ages--8.4%. For reasons stated in the text this is inevitably a biased sample. The number of those without
pneumoconiosis
is probably lower than the true figure because the deaths of miners and ex-miners in whom there is no suspicion of
lung disease
may not have been reported to the coroner or to the
pneumoconiosis
medical panel. There appears to be no positive link between carcinoma of the lung and
pneumoconiosis
. There is a surprisingly high number of smokers and ex-smokers among these miners, and this appears to have more relevance to the prevalence of carcinoma of the lung than does
pneumoconiosis
.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the lung in Lancashire coalminers. 48 90
Reports have appeared in the public press suggesting that dust from fibrous glass may be responsible for causing a form of
lung disease
in workers similar to that produced by asbestos. These reports are attributed to information about a case of
pneumoconiosis
presented at a meeting held under the auspices of the National Cancer Institute on November 15, 1978. They have occasioned widespread concern among those who make and use fibrous glass. The purpose of this communication is to provide additional information which now shows that the case in question was almost certainly due to asbestos and not to exposure to fibrous glass.
...
PMID:Pneumoconiosis and fibrous glass. 51 27
Intrapulmonary deposition of 1-mum-diameter particles of dioctyl sebacate was studied in 58 working coalminers. Total deposition was found to be significantly correlated with lung function measurements characterizing airway obstruction. The closest relationship was between deposition and the mean maximal flow rate in the third quarter of a forced expiration. The shape of the exhaled aerosol recovery curve was also found to be related to the degree of airway obstruction; 3 basic types are described. The concave type was more common in smokers, in whom deposition was significantly greater. The presence of simple
pneumoconiosis
was not associated with the degree of aerosol deposition. The significance of the findings of aerosol deposition and its recovery pattern are discussed in relation to the pathogenesis of
lung disease
.
...
PMID:Aerosol deposition and airway obstruction. 98 81
The Medical Research Council and the Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Trial studies clearly demonstrated that long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) for more than 15 h/day improved mortality and morbidity in a well-defined group of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. There are no similar randomised control studies in patients with other hypoxaemic lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis and
pneumoconiosis
. The prescription of oxygen for other restrictive lung disorders is complicated by hypoventilation requiring mechanical support as well as oxygen and should be restricted to special centres. The clearest indications for LTOT are for patients with cor pulmonale, hypoxic chronic bronchitis and emphysema, and in terminally ill patients who require palliation. Before LTOT is considered, the patient must be clinically stable and on appropriate optimum therapy such as antibiotics, bronchodilators, physiotherapy and having stopped smoking tobacco. Many patients first present for LTOT with profound hypoxaemia and hypercapnia during an infective, often oedematous exacerbation of their
lung disease
. Assessments should occur during convalescence when the patient is clinically stable. They should be shown to have a PaO2 less than 7.3 kPa and/or a PaCO2 greater than 6 kPa on two occasions at least 3 weeks apart. FEV1 should be less than 1.5 litres, and there should be a less than 15% improvement in FEV1 after bronchodilators. All patients should be assessed by an experienced chest physician. Patients with a PaO2 between 7.3 and 8 kPa who have polycythaemia, right heart failure or pulmonary hypertension may gain benefit from LTOT but this is still to be clearly proven.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Indications for long-term oxygen therapy. 151 74
We retrospectively prepared step sections of nondiagnostic TBLB materials obtained from patients with diffuse or multiple
lung disease
and evaluated the diagnostic significance of the step section method. Among 112 patients with nondiagnostic TBLB findings, the preparation of step sections resulted in specific findings in seven cases. Step sections were especially useful for the detection of epithelioid granulomas and tumor tissue in patients with sarcoidosis and lymphangiosis carcinomatosa, respectively, but their contribution to the diagnosis of hypersensitivity pneumonitis, collagen-vascular disease, Mycoplasma pneumonia and
pneumoconiosis
was relatively small. In addition, step sections were useful for the detection of bronchiolitis obliterans affecting respiratory bronchioles. Overall, the examination of step sections was considered to be clinically useful in 30 cases (26.8 percent). Accordingly, the examination of step sections can be recommended before a further diagnostic procedure is chosen, if a TBLB performed in patients with diffuse or multifocal
lung disease
is nondiagnostic.
...
PMID:Step section preparation of transbronchial lung biopsy. Significance in the diagnosis of diffuse lung disease. 191 11
Inhaled silicate dusts may cause
lung disease
through their surface coordination of iron with subsequent oxidant generation via the Fenton reaction.
Pneumoconiosis
, irritant bronchitis, focal emphysema, and carcinoma may be produced by oxidants either directly through lipid peroxidation and protein inactivation, or indirectly by oxidant-mediated release of cytokines such as platelet-derived growth factor. The increased incidence of tuberculosis observed among silicate workers could be explained by accumulation of iron complexed by dust particles in the lung and made available to dormant mycobacteria as a virulence factor.
...
PMID:Hypothesis: is lung disease after silicate inhalation caused by oxidant generation? 197 6
In order to shed light on the histological changes occurring in the lungs of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), we scrutinized an open lung biopsy file of 199 patients and selected the patients with RA. The histopathological patterns observed were: pulmonary rheumatoid nodules (4 cases, including one with rheumatoid
pneumoconiosis
); usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) (2 cases); desquamative interstitial pneumonia (2 cases); bronchiolitis obliterans with patchy organizing pneumonia (2 cases); follicular bronchiolitis (1 case); organizing pneumonia always associated with bronchiolitis (3 cases); granulomatous reaction (3 cases); obliterating vasculitis (3 cases); granulomatous vasculitis (1 case); lymphoid hyperplasia (2 cases); and localized pulmonary fibrosis (1 case). The clinical data and laboratory findings for the histopathological groups overlapped and did not properly predict the anatomical picture. Both patients with UIP died of
lung disease
. Otherwise the prognosis in the series was good.
...
PMID:Open lung biopsy of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. 208 43
Communication between cells determines the steady-state composition of the lung in health and becomes a critical determinant of outcome in pathologic processes resulting in anatomic remodeling. This review presents the evolving concepts of the biology of cytokines (also known as peptide growth factors or biological response modifiers) in maintaining normal tissue growth and homeostasis. How these extracellular signaling proteins are involved in such pathologic disorders as spontaneous pulmonary fibrosis, sarcoidosis,
pneumoconiosis
, and the evolution and recovery from acute lung injury is also discussed. During the past decade the cytokines have come to the fore as important multifunctional mediators of cell behavior and cell-cell communication. A wide range of cellular responses are influenced or triggered when cytokines interact with cells. These include mitosis, chemotaxis, angiogenesis, cytoskeleton arrangement, immunomodulation, and extracellular matrix production. Cytokines influence cell behavior by binding to specific high affinity surface receptors on target cells. These receptors are linked in turn at the cell membrane to a complex array of intracellular signaling pathways. Individual cytokines may inhibit as well as promote cellular functions such as mitosis and thereby play a critical role in homeostasis of normal tissue elements. Hence, cytokines are intimately involved in normal tissue homeostasis as well as in processes eventuating in growth and remodeling. All cells produce and secrete cytokines at some time during their life. Each cytokine is capable of modulating more than one cellular function. Although produced by a variety of cell types, the triggers that induce a specific cytokine to be produced differ between cells. Many of the cytokines share regions of homologous nucleic acid sequences, suggesting that they are members of larger gene families. Given that tissues and cells are exposed to complex cytokine mixtures rather than to individual cytokines, recent attention has turned to understanding how cytokines interact. The combined effects of cytokine mixtures have proved to be both complex and unpredictable based on knowledge of the separate actions of the individual cytokines involved. In studies of the role of cytokines in
lung disease
, early research attention has focused on those cytokines released by alveolar macrophages (the so-called macrophage-derived growth factors). However, structural cells as well as immune effector cells of the lung are capable of cytokine production and release. The cytokines receiving the most attention to date in relation to pulmonary diseases include platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), interleukin-1 (IL-1), transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), insulinlike growth factor I (IGF-I), and, most recently, interleukin-6 (IL-6).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cytokines of the lung. 224 Aug 51
The type of
lung disease
caused by metal compounds depends on the nature of the offending agent, its physicochemical form, the dose, exposure conditions and host factors. The fumes or gaseous forms of several metals, e.g. cadmium (Cd), manganese (Mn), mercury (Hg), nickel carbonyl (Nl(CO)4, zinc chloride (ZnCl2), vanadium pentoxide (V2O5), may lead to acute chemical pneumonitis and pulmonary oedema or to acute tracheobronchitis. Metal fume fever, which may follow the inhalation of metal fumes e.g. zinc (Zn), copper (Cu) and many others, is a poorly understood influenza-like reaction, accompanied by an acute self-limiting neutrophil alveolitis. Chronic obstructive lung disease may result from occupational exposure to mineral dusts, including probably some metallic dusts, or from jobs involving the working of metal compounds, such as welding. Exposure to cadmium may lead to emphysema. Bronchial asthma may be caused by complex platinum salts, nickel, chromium or cobalt, presumably on the basis of allergic sensitization. The cause of asthma in aluminium workers is unknown. It is remarkable that asthma induced by nickel (Ni) or chromium (Cr) is apparently infrequent, considering their potency and frequent involvement as dermal sensitizers. Metallic dusts deposited in the lung may give rise to pulmonary fibrosis and functional impairment, depending on the fibrogenic potential of the agent and on poorly understood host factors. Inhalation of iron compounds causes siderosis, a
pneumoconiosis
with little or no fibrosis. Hard metal
lung disease
is a fibrosis characterized by desquamative and giant cell interstitial pneumonitis and is probably caused by cobalt, since a similar disease has been observed in workers exposed to cobalt in the absence of tungsten carbide. Chronic beryllium disease is a fibrosis with sarcoid-like epitheloid granulomas and is presumably due to a cell-mediated immune response to beryllium. Such a mechanism may be responsible for the pulmonary fibrosis occasionally found in subjects exposed to other metals e.g. aluminium (Al), titanium (Ti), rare earths. The proportion of lung cancer attributable to occupation is around 15%, with exposure to metals being frequently incriminated. Underground mining of e.g. uranium or iron is associated with a high incidence of lung cancer, as a result of exposure to radon. At least some forms of arsenic, chromium and nickel are well established lung carcinogens in humans. There is also evidence for increased lung cancer mortality in cadmium workers and in iron or steel workers.
...
PMID:Metal toxicity and the respiratory tract. 217 66
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